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Sentence Writing. Modifiers. Modifiers. Modifiers: How Modifiers Work A modifier adds to or limits a word's meaning. Modifiers describe other words, making the meaning of those other words more specific. Modifiers answer the following questions about the words they modify:
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Sentence Writing Modifiers
Modifiers • Modifiers: How Modifiers Work • A modifier adds to or limits a word's meaning. • Modifiers describe other words, making the meaning of those other words more specific. Modifiers answer the following questions about the words they modify: • What kind? Which one(s)? How many or how much? Whose? • When? Where? Why? How? To what extent? Under what conditions? • Watch this sentence become more specific as it adds modifiers: • BASIC SENTENCE: Women earn salaries. • (How many women?) Many women earn salaries. • (Which women?) Many women in the civil services earn salaries. • (What kind of salaries?) Many women in the civil services earn good salaries. • (When?) Many women in the civil services earn good salaries • after their first few promotions.
Modifiers • Instructions • The following sentences develop from the same basic sentence: People love movies. In the space provided after each sentence, write the modifying word or phrase that answers the question in parentheses. • Example: Sentimental people love movies. (What kind of people?)Sentimental • 1. Most people love movies. (How many people?) • 2. Those people love movies. (Which people?) • 3. People from Connecticut love movies. (Which people?) • 4. People almost always love movies. (When do they love them?) • 5. Because of the exciting plots, people love movies. (Why do they love them?) • 6. People love movies passionately. (How do they love them?) • 7. People love movies at drive-in theaters. (Where do they love them?) • 8. People love Cinestudio movies. (Which movies?) • 9. People love Clint Eastwood movies. (Whose movies?) • 10. People love movies about the Old West. (What kind of movies?)
Modifiers • Modifiers: Single Word Modifiers • A single word may play the role of modifier. • Some busybodies cause serious trouble. (Some answers "Which busybodies?" and serious answers "What kind of trouble?") • That creep constantly lies. (That answers "Which creep?" and constantly answers "When?") • Sometimes several single words, each one acting separately, can modify the same word: • He has never felt a generous human impulse. (Never answers "When?", a answers "How many impulses?", and generous and human answer "What kind of impulse?") • Note that when a verb's modifier splits the verb in two, as in the case of never in the example above, the modifier refers to the main verb. • There are two kinds of single-word modifiers: adjectives and adverbs. An adjective modifies a noun or a pronoun, and an adverb modifies a verb, an adjective, or another adverb. Adverbs often end in -ly.
Modifiers • Instructions • Certain single-word modifiers are written in italic type in these sentences. In the space provided, write the word that is modified by the modifier. • 1. Those fancy new forecasts amuse me. • 2. Yesterday the reporters confidently predicted snow. • 3. Today they expect light rain. • 4. They change every hour's forecast. • 5. I am ignoring those fickle daily predictions. • 6. My cows can usually interpret the changing weather pretty • 7. They sit there calmly and face the humid wind. • 8. My sinuses are becoming very reliable barometers. • 9. Now I do not need any weather • 10.No scientific gadgets can beat my fine
Modifiers • Modifiers: Prepositional Phrase Modifiers • A prepositional phrase begins with a preposition and ends with an object, which is usually a noun or a pronoun. • In the sentences below, the prepositional phrases are in italics and enclosed within brackets [ ___ ]. There is an asterisk (*) after each preposition. • Please open that door [beside* you]. • Thank goodness we bought that fan [by* the window]. • We really needed it [during* the night]. • We'd have been miserable [without* it]. • Notice how the preposition in each sentence shows a relationship between the object and the word that the phrase modifies. Prepositions often show space or time relationships (as in the first three examples above) but sometimes they show other kinds of relationship (as in the fourth example above).
Modifiers • Between a preposition and its object there may be one or more single-word modifiers. • [before* the first play][of* Lewis's most important game] • A prepositional phrase always acts as a modifier. • The roads [beyond* Dallas] were in terrible shape. (Where?) • I remember that bumpy street [beside* the tracks]. (Which?) • You always bounced wildly [toward* every stoplight]. (Where?) • I certainly had doubts [about* my best friend] then. (What kind?)
Modifiers • Instructions • After each sentence below, in the space provided, write the prepositional phrase which answers the given question (in parentheses) about some other word in the sentence. Then write the word which the phrase modifies. Separate the prepositional phrase from the word it modifies with a comma and a space. • Example: I'll take Aunt Betty around town. (Where?)around town, take • She has interests like mine. (What kind?) • She'll love the ice cream shop under the bridge. (Which one?) • She lives so intensely on these trips. (When?) • During the train ride, she hardly slept a wink. (When?) • She was happily entertaining a homesick teenager from a small town.(Which one?)
Modifiers • Modifiers: Combining Sentences • A subject + verb may take more than one completer. • Completers may be compounded by the conjunctions and, but, yet, or, nor: • Every 15,000 miles, youshould change the oil and the oil filter in your car. • A word may take more than one modifier. • Sometimes modifiers simply pile up near the word they modify: • Youmay needan adjustable long-handled filterwrench [with a swivel joint]. • At other times, modifiers are connected by the same conjunctions that create compound subjects, verbs, and completers--and, but, yet, or, nor: • However, [without tools] but [with a strong bare-handed grip] youcan unscrew the filtersimply and quickly.
Modifiers • Instructions • Combine each set of sentences by compounding the sentence parts in bold. Use the conjunctions given in parentheses. • Completers • 1. We watch the papers for a clue. We watch the network news for a clue. (and) • 2. That kind of arrogance impresses Ben. It doesn't impresses me. (but not) • 3. Your dog always eats my garbage. If not, he eats my flowers(or) • 4. My father loves your high little voice. He loves the sound of your big old tuba, too. (and) • 5. These jokes are not new. They are not funny, either.(neither . . . nor . . .)
Modifiers • Modifiers • 6. I sing beautifully in the shower. I sing freely in the shower. (and) • 7. Mosquitoes buzz in the tent. They don't buzz in the cabin. (but not) • 8. Sylvia cooks spaghetti in a wok. If not, she cooks it over her grill. (or) • 9. Tricia expresses her feelings easily with most people. She doesn't express them easily with children. (but not) • 10. Hanna wears socks to bed in the winter. She wears them even on chilly nights in the summer. (and)
Modifiers • Reference answers • 1. We watch the papers and the network news for a clue. • 2. That kind of arrogance impresses Ben but not me. • 3. Your dog always eats my garbage or my flowers. • 4. My father loves your high little voice and the sound of your big old tuba. • 5. These jokes are neither new nor funny. • 6. I sing beautifully and freely in the shower. • 7. Mosquitoes buzz in the tent but not in the cabin. • 8. Sylvia cooks spaghetti in a wok or over her grill. • 9. Tricia expresses her feelings easily with most people but not with children. • 10. Hanna wears socks to bed in the winter and even on chilly nights in the summer.